“Absurdity, n.:
A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one’s own opinion.”
- Ambrose Bierce, ‘The Devil’s
Dictionary’.
Certain
combinations of words can be virtually guaranteed to lower the spirits. One
thinks of constructions like “Michael Winner”; “diplomatic solution”; “Ricky
Martin”; “Big Brother” (the Endemol incarnation, as opposed to George
Orwell’s). To which grim list we can now add “academic studies” and “the wisdom
of pension funds”. In a letter to the Financial Times, investment manager Evan
Salway alludes to the futility of academic studies when contemplating the benefits
of active versus passive management. He goes further and cites the debatable
wisdom of those pension funds who, having largely ignored the biggest equity
bull market in history (1982-2000), finally took the plunge – at the start of
2000 – and cheerfully switched out of bonds and into stocks just in time to a)
get hosed by a catastrophic bear market in stocks, and b) miss out on a monster
rally in bonds.
Mr. Salway
points out that while academic studies of active versus passive management may
suggest that the average active manager underperforms, such studies can easily
be challenged, not least because they tend to focus on long-only investing. But
regulators have made it increasingly easy for active managers to sell short as
well as trudge along the long-only treadmill. It is difficult (though not,
sadly, impossible) to believe that there are investors out there who cling
resolutely to the “long-only is best” school of guaranteeing sub-optimal
investment returns. He also suggests that with much corporate newsflow pointing
to the adoption of passive management by pension funds,
“at such an
inflection point in capital markets when choosing between active and passive on
a historical performance basis, it is [perhaps] just as dangerous as choosing
between equities and bonds on that basis in 2000.”
To descend to
the ‘policy out of the rear-view mirror’ level of pension funds for just one
moment, a comparison between the benchmark hedge fund index and the benchmark
global equity index makes a striking argument in favour of the former. Between
1994 and 2008, hedge funds – as represented by the CSFB / Tremont hedge index –
returned an annualised 10.7%. Stocks – as represented by the MSCI World index –
returned an annualised 6.3%. The data haven’t been arbitrarily “fixed”: the
Tremont index doesn’t go back beyond 1994. Not only did hedge funds, in
aggregate, deliver 68% higher returns per year – after fees – than stocks, but
they did so with significantly lower drawdowns. Hedge funds’ worst period
historically (July-October 1998) incurred a drawdown of 13.8%. That is shorter
in duration and shallower by comparison with the 30-month drawdown of 48.4%
suffered by the global stock market between March 2000 and September 2002. In
crude terms, with the benefit of hindsight, which market would you rather have
owned ?
Some caveats may
be required. Survivorship bias – which removes failed businesses from the
indices – will be present, but in both indices. And it could turn out to be the
case that the hedge fund industry, having seen huge capital inflows during the
period as it grew toward maturity, has delivered its best returns. But the
single biggest caveat is that we are not realistically comparing like with
like: equities constitute a discrete asset class; hedge funds comprise an
altogether broader school of disparate individuals who putatively represent
talent. Whereas the equities asset class is by definition long-only, the hedge
fund sector is effectively unrestrained, whether in terms of investible assets
(anything), positioning (long or short, or both), or leverage.
The fragility of
academic study of investment is that, as with economics, it presumes the
existence of a closed, scientifically rational system. Not only are there
multiple players within the markets with multiple approaches and beliefs and
multiple relevant time horizons, not even a majority of that varied crowd can
ever realistically be described as entirely rational. And whether or not there
is an information gap between the academics who study the markets and the
professionals who work within them, there is undoubtedly a wealth gap, the
existence of which carries its own conclusions.
On the topic of
pension funds, Bloomberg’s Caroline Baum (“Pension funds ‘diversify’ into
commodity bubble”) quite fairly points out that while other asset classes enjoy
metrics that express the degree to which prices have travelled beyond
fundamental anchors (earnings, for example, in the case of stocks, and yields
in the case of bonds), for commodities “no such quantifiable ratio” (other than
the crude measure of the rate of price increases over time) exists. Her
implication is that now that pension funds seem to have fully embraced the
commodities story, their entry into the market could easily represent a
worrisome near-term top. Michael Aronstein of Marketfield Asset Management is
cited with the following useful advice:
“If you want to
be in commodities, buy a process, not a product.. Own a gas company. Or a
forest products company. Buy an entity that extracts value. And you get a free
option: the product might appreciate.”
So although the
macro picture darkens daily, there are still pockets of promise within the
equities markets, even if those markets in aggregate now seem to be trading on
nothing more than the fumes of wishful thinking. And this gets to the heart of
the “academic” wrangling over active versus passive investing. Markets and
investment products are too complex to be reduced to binary decisions like
(higher cost) active versus (lower cost) indexed. Investor expectations, too,
are more nuanced than the academics (and consultants ?) might care to admit. In
broadly efficient and relatively low-yielding markets like government bonds
currently, active managers, with all their attendant costs, will have to
perform heroically to outperform low-cost ETFs. In the maelstrom of equity
markets, however, investor requirements and objectives are likely to be more
varied. While some investors will crave outsized returns, others will have a
natural preference for avoidance of loss and the pursuit of absolute returns.
Both strategies demand active management. Other investors, particularly with a
longer and perhaps more disinterested time horizon, will be largely satisfied
with low cost passive management. But passive management comes with its own
costs – particularly during a bear market that will doom advocates to tracking
that same market lower. No one approach can possibly suit all. To assume
otherwise does a grave disservice to those managers expending valuable
intellectual capital to preserve and grow client capital in the midst of a
treacherous market environment.
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